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Muthukali

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Gold prices for Saturday - Thailand

The Gold Traders Association this morning set the buying prices at 23,103.84 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments and 23,450 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The selling prices were set at 23,950 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments, and 23,550 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The gold prices increased 150 baht from yesterday’s close.

The buying prices yesterday closed at 22,967.40 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments and 23,300 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The selling prices closed at 23,800 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments, and 23,400 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.
 

Muthukali

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Gold prices for Monday - Thailand

The Gold Traders Association on Monday morning set the buying prices at 23,164.48 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments and 23,500 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The selling prices were set at 24,000 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments, and 23,600 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The gold prices dropped 50 baht from Sunday’s close.
 

Muthukali

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Gold prices for Tuesday - Thailand

The Gold Traders Association this morning set the buying prices at 23,209.96 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments and 23,550 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The selling prices were set at 24,050 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments, and 23,650 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The gold prices unchanged from yesterday’s close.
 

Muthukali

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Gold Set for Worst Run Since 1999 as Dollar Strengthens

Gold declined for the first time in three days, set for the worst run of monthly losses since 1999, as concern that Europe’s fiscal turmoil is worsening boosted the dollar. Platinum fell.

Spot gold lost as much as 0.6 percent to $1,571.43 an ounce and was at $1,573.60 at 9:44 a.m. in Singapore. Bullion is 5.5 percent lower this month, the biggest drop since December and the fourth straight monthly decline. The dollar has gained 4.5 percent against a six-currency basket including the euro in May.

Economists from Bank of America Merrill Lynch to JPMorgan Chase & Co. predict that Greece, which faces a June 17 election, leaving the currency bloc would threaten global prosperity as trade and financial ties spread the fallout. The possibility of a Greek departure sent the cost of insuring Spanish government and financial-institution debt to a record this month and put the euro on track for the biggest monthly decline in eight.

“Whether it’s Greek leaving the euro or Spain being next in line for a bailout, investors are focusing on the crisis in Europe at the moment and picking the dollar as their haven of choice,” said Sun Yonggang, an analyst at Everbright Futures Co., a unit of China’s largest state-owned investment group.

Gold is still up 0.6 this year as investors joined central banks in buying the metal to diversify their assets. Holdings in the SPDR Gold Trust, the biggest bullion-backed exchange-traded fund, rose 1.3 percent this year and stood at 1,270.26 metric tons on May 25, according to data on the company’s website.

Central banks in Turkey, Ukraine, Mexico and Kazakhstan added to gold reserves in April, while the Philippines increased holdings in March, International Monetary Fund data show.

China’s Consumption
August-delivery bullion gained as much as 0.9 percent to $1,585.70 an ounce on Comex in New York, before trading at $1,575.90. U.S. markets were closed yesterday for Memorial Day. Cash gold of 99.99 percent purity on the Shanghai Gold Exchange fell for the first day in four, dropping 0.3 percent to 323 yuan a gram ($1,583.38 an ounce).

Gold consumption in China was 761 tons last year, Wang Shengbin, vice-chairman at the China Gold Association, said yesterday. That compares to the estimate of 769.8 tons from the producer-funded World Gold Council. The country may become the biggest user this year, displacing India, the council predicts.

Cash platinum fell for the first day in three, dropping as much as 0.5 percent to $1,431.75 an ounce, before trading at $1,434. One ounce of platinum bought 0.9103 ounce of gold today, after the ratio dropped to 0.9044 yesterday, the least since Jan. 16, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Spot silver rose as much as 0.5 percent to $28.5375 an ounce, and was last at $28.4425. Palladium climbed as much as 0.5 percent to $608.50 an ounce, extending yesterday’s 2.6 percent advance, and traded at $606.25.
 

Muthukali

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Gold prices for Wednesday - Thailand

The Gold Traders Association this morning set the buying prices at 22,967.40 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments and 23,300 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The selling prices were set at 23,800 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments, and 23,400 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The gold prices went down 250 baht from yesterday’s close.

The buying prices yesterday closed at 23,209.96 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments and 23,550 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The selling prices closed at 24,050 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments, and 23,650 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.
 

Muthukali

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Asset
Gold prices for Thursday - Thailand

The Gold Traders Association this morning set the buying prices at 23,164.48 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments and 23,500 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The selling prices were set at 24,000 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments, and 23,600 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The gold prices went up 200 baht from yesterday’s close.

The buying prices yesterday closed at 22,967.40 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments and 23,300 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The selling prices closed at 23,800 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments, and 23,400 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.
 

Muthukali

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Crude Set for Longest Weekly Losing Streak Since January 2007

Oil traded near the lowest close since October, set for the longest weekly losing streak in five and a half years, on speculation that slowing U.S. growth and Europe’s debt crisis will reduce fuel demand as supplies rise.

Futures were little changed after dropping 17 percent in May, the biggest monthly decline since December 2008. U.S. jobless claims climbed to a one-month high and the nation’s gross domestic product expanded slower than estimated, reports showed yesterday. The country’s crude stockpiles last week increased to a 22-year high while Saudi Arabian oil output advanced to the highest level since at least January 1989. Fitch Ratings downgraded the credit of eight Spanish regions.

Oil for July delivery was at $86.49 a barrel, down 4 cents, in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange at 9:20 a.m. Sydney time. The contract yesterday slid 1.5 percent to $86.53, the lowest close since Oct. 20. Prices are 13 percent lower this year and down 4.8 percent this week for a fifth weekly drop, the longest losing streak since January 2007.

Brent oil for July settlement decreased $1.60, or 1.6 percent, to $101.87 a barrel on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange yesterday. The European benchmark contract’s premium to West Texas Intermediate closed at $15.34.

Oil output by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries rose in May to the highest level since 2008 as Saudi Arabia pumped crude at the fastest pace in at least 23 years, a Bloomberg survey showed. OPEC production gained 20,000 barrels to an average 31.595 million barrels a day in May from a revised 31.575 million in April, according to the survey of oil companies, producers and analysts.
 

Muthukali

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Gold prices for Friday - Thailand

The Gold Traders Association this morning set the buying prices at 23,058.36 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments and 23,400 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The selling prices were set at 23,900 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments, and 23,500 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The gold prices went down 100 baht from yesterday’s close.

The buying prices yesterday closed at 23,164.48 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments and 23,500 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The selling prices closed at 24,000 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments, and 23,600 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.
 

Muthukali

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Gold prices for Saturday - Thailand

The Gold Traders Association this morning set the buying prices at 23,755.72 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments and 24,100 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The selling prices were set at 24,600 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments, and 24,200 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The gold prices went up 700 baht from yesterday’s close.

The buying prices yesterday closed at 23,058.36 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments and 23,400 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The selling prices closed at 23,900 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments, and 23,500 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.
 

Muthukali

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Hedge Funds in Longest Rout Since Global Recession: Commodities

Hedge funds curbed bullish bets on commodities for a third consecutive month, the longest retreat since the global recession, as Europe’s worsening debt crisis and slowing U.S. job growth sent prices tumbling.

Money managers reduced net-long positions across 18 U.S. futures and options by 8.1 percent to 620,715 contracts in the week ended May 29, extending the monthly decline to 26 percent, Commodity Futures Trading Commission data show. Speculators are now the most bearish since the start of year on copper, oil, heating oil, corn, gold and silver. The Standard & Poor’s GSCI Spot Index of 24 raw materials slumped 13 percent in May.

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The region’s manufacturing fell to a three-year low, and unemployment reached a record 11 percent, reports showed. Europe accounts for 18 percent of copper and wheat demand.

The euro fell to a 23-month low against the dollar June 1 after the European Central Bank rejected a plan to recapitalize Bankia group, Spain’s third-largest lender. The region’s manufacturing fell to a three-year low, and unemployment reached a record 11 percent, reports showed. Europe accounts for 18 percent of copper and wheat demand. The U.S., the world’s biggest oil and natural-gas consumer, said last week that employers added the fewest workers in a year in May.

“Commodities are continuing to take a beating in light of global macro uncertainties,” said Chad Morganlander, a Florham Park, New Jersey-based money manager at Stifel Nicolaus & Co., which oversees more than $115 billion. Europe has “thrown a wet blanket on speculators’ desire to hold risk,” he said.

Plunging Prices
Speculators reduced their net-long position by 47 percent since the end of February, the longest slump since a four-month retreat ending in October 2008. Commodity prices fell 61 percent in the seven months through January 2009 as the global economy contended with its worst recession since World War II.

The S&P GSCI fell 6.4 percent last week, the most since September. The MSCI All-Country World Index of equities dropped 2.7 percent, while the dollar rose 0.6 percent against a basket of six major currencies, the fifth consecutive gain. Treasuries returned 1.35 percent, a Bank of America Corp. index shows.

Twenty of the materials tracked by the S&P GSCI declined last week. Crude oil tumbled 8.4 percent and reached the lowest price in almost eight months, while cotton slumped to a 27-month low. Nickel led the declines in base metals, dropping 5.6 percent. Wheat dropped 10 percent even as hedge funds became the most bullish since June 2011. Crude extended its slump today, falling 0.9 percent to $82.48 a barrel.

A gauge of manufacturing within the 17 nations that use the euro contracted for a 10th month, dropping in May to 45.1, the lowest since mid-2009, compared with 45.9 in April, London-based Markit Economics said June 1. The European Union said June 1 that Spain’s unemployment rate was the highest in the trade bloc at 24.3 percent in April.

Slow Growth
In the U.S., the world’s largest economy, the Labor Department said June 1 that payrolls climbed by 69,000 last month, less than the most-pessimistic forecast in a Bloomberg survey. The unemployment rate unexpectedly rose to 8.2 percent from 8.1 percent. Treasuries rallied, driving 10-year yields below 1.5 percent for the first time.

“When there’s concern about the global economy, you’re not going to be rushing into commodities, and end-users are going to be more cautious about buying,” said Adrian Day, the president of Adrian Day Asset Management in Annapolis, Maryland, who oversees about $170 million of assets. “People are selling because they’re looking for liquidity and they’re nervous about the global economic outlook.”

Commodities may rebound should governments take further steps to revive economic growth, said Jason Votruba, the co- manager for small-cap equities at Scout Investment Advisors in Kansas City, Missouri, which manages about $22 billion.

‘Coordinated Effort’
“We will get some sort of rebound in the second half of the year,” Votruba said. “This is tied to global macroeconomic concerns, and we’re going to see a coordinated effort by governments to focus on getting global growth going in the right direction, and that will drive commodities higher.”

The U.S. jobs report last week “does change the game” for the Federal Reserve, said John Silvia, the chief economist at Wells Fargo & Co. in Charlotte, North Carolina. The central bank may consider new stimulus at its June 20 meeting, said Dean Maki, the chief U.S. economist at Barclays Plc in New York and a former Fed economist.

Bullish gold bets were little changed at 77,325 contracts, close to the lowest since December 2008, CFTC data show. Gold futures rallied 3.2 percent last week to $1,622.10 an ounce on the Comex in New York, on renewed concern that further steps by the Fed to spur growth will accelerate inflation and boost demand for the metal as a hedge.

Money Flows
Investors added $510.2 million into commodity funds in the week ended May 30, according to data from Cambridge, Massachusetts-based EPFR Global, which tracks money flows. That’s the first inflow in six weeks, said Brad Durham, a managing director for EPFR. Investors seeking a haven investment put money mostly into gold and silver, he said.

“Investors are running scared,” Durham said by telephone. “They’ve lost faith in equities and lost faith in anything that’s so-called higher risk. The money has to go somewhere. The general comfort level with holding cash is pretty low.”

Speculators cut their net-long position in crude for a fourth week, down 0.1 percent to 136,584 contracts, the lowest since September 2010, CFTC data show. Prices tumbled as low as $82.29 a barrel last week on the New York Mercantile Exchange, the lowest since Oct. 7.

Copper futures fell 3.9 percent last week, touching $3.30 a pound on the Comex in New York, the lowest for a most-active contract since Dec. 20. The metal has dropped 19 percent in the past year. Speculators more than doubled their bets on lower copper prices last week to 6,757 contracts, the most bearish since Nov. 29, CFTC data showed.

China Manufacturing
China’s Purchasing Managers’ Index fell to 50.4 last month from 53.3 in April, the statistics bureau and logistics federation said June 1 in Beijing. Economic growth in China may slow for a sixth straight quarter to 7.9 percent in the three months that end June 30, according to the median of estimates from 21 economists in a Bloomberg survey.

A measure of net-long positions in 11 U.S. farm goods fell 11 percent to 389,702 contracts, the CFTC said. Bullish holdings have dropped 47 percent in the past 10 weeks.

Corn holdings plunged 44 percent to 61,493 contracts, the fewest since June 2010, CFTC data show. Prices tumbled to an 18- month low of $5.51 a bushel on the CBOT.

“Commodities are falling because folks are downgrading growth and supply expectations,” said Mihir Worah, who manages Pacific Investment Management Co.’s $22 billion Commodity Real Return Strategy Fund from Newport Beach, California. There’s “a general desire to avoid risky or volatile assets, given all the uncertainties in Europe,” he wrote in an e-mail.
 

Muthukali

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Oil Gains a Second Day in New York as Stockpiles Decline

Oil gained a second day in New York before a government report that may show crude stockpiles dropped for the first time in 11 weeks in the U.S., the world’s biggest consumer of the commodity.

Futures advanced as much as 0.9 percent after rising for the first day in five yesterday. U.S. inventories probably slipped 1 million barrels last week as refineries increased gasoline output to meet peak summer consumption, according to the median estimate of nine analysts in a Bloomberg News survey before an Energy Department report tomorrow. Supplies climbed to a 22-year high in the week ended May 25. Prices also rebounded after falling to a technical support level.

“We would like to see some of that substantial stockpile reduced,” said Michael McCarthy, a chief market strategist at CMC Markets Asia Pacific Pty in Sydney. “The markets seem to have come to the conclusion all at once that we were in oversold territory. West Texas has moved back into an old trading range between $82 and $88 a barrel and I expect those bounds to hold the contract over the course of this week.”

Oil for July delivery gained as much as 78 cents to $84.76 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange, and was at $84.64 at 10:57 a.m. Sydney time. The contract yesterday rose 0.9 percent to $83.98, the highest close since May 31. Prices are 14 percent lower this year.

Brent oil for July settlement increased 56 cents, or 0.6 percent, to $99.41 a barrel on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange. The European benchmark contract’s premium to West Texas Intermediate was at $14.77, from $14.87 yesterday.

Bollinger Band
Oil in New York has rebounded since closing below its lower Bollinger Band on June 1 for the first time in more than three weeks, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The indicator is at about $82.96 today. Buy orders tend to be clustered near chart-support levels.

Companies operated U.S. refineries at 89.6 percent of capacity last week, up 0.5 percentage point from the prior week and the highest level since August, the Bloomberg survey showed. Supplies of gasoline and distillates, a category that includes diesel and heating oil, may have each gained 1 million barrels.

The American Petroleum Institute will release separate inventory data today. The API collects stockpile information on a voluntary basis from operators of refineries, bulk terminals and pipelines. The government requires that reports be filed with the Energy Department for its weekly survey.
 

Muthukali

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Gold prices for Tuesday - Thailand

The Gold Traders Association this morning set the buying prices at 23,755.72 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments and 24,100 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The selling prices were set at 24,600 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments, and 24,200 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The gold prices unchanged from Saturday’s close.
 

Muthukali

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Gold prices for Wednesday - Thailand

The Gold Traders Association this morning announced the buying price at 23,755.72 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments and 24,100 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The selling prices were set at 24,600 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments, and 24,200 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.
 

Muthukali

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Oil Gains a Fourth Day Amid Economic Stimulus Speculation

Oil advanced for a fourth day in New York amid speculation policy makers in the U.S. and Europe will take steps to revive the slowing economy, boosting fuel demand.

Futures increased as much as 0.7 percent for the longest run of gains since April. Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta President Dennis Lockhart said yesterday a fragile recovery may require more stimulus while European Central Bank President Mario Draghi said officials stand ready to act as the euro region’s expansion outlook worsens. U.S. crude stockpiles fell for the first time in eleven weeks, a government report showed.

Oil for July delivery increased as much as 62 cents to $85.64 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange and was at $85.46 at 9 a.m. Sydney time. The contract yesterday rose 0.9 percent to $85.02, the highest close since May 31. Prices are 14 percent lower this year.

Brent oil for July settlement climbed $1.80, or 1.8 percent, to $100.64 a barrel on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange yesterday. The European benchmark contract’s premium to West Texas Intermediate closed at $15.62.

U.S. crude inventories dropped by a less-than-expected 111,000 barrels last week, a report from the Energy Department showed yesterday. They were forecast to decline 500,000 barrels, according to the median of 12 analyst estimates in a Bloomberg News survey.

Supplies at Cushing, Oklahoma, the delivery point for New York-traded futures, increased 926,000 barrels to a record 47.8 million. Domestic oil production rose to 6.25 million barrels a day, the highest level since February 1999.
 

Muthukali

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Gold bugs tout price gain on dour US data - Weak employment data makes QE3 likely

Foreign funds will return to investing in gold as a safe haven with the euro-zone debt crisis worsening and the US economy weakening, causing gold prices to possibly reach US$1,900 an ounce this year.

Kasemtas Dardarananda, an MFC Asset Management fund manager in the global equities department, said gold will start gaining again now that the US unemployment rate and other key economic data were worse than market expectations.

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The latest survey of US and world financial institutions added more pressure on the US Federal Reserve to launch a third quantitative easing (QE3), with calls from Morgan Stanley and Socie{aac}te{aac} Ge{aac}ne{aac}rale.

Market analysts all agree the possibility of another round of QE is as high as 80%. Fewer than 100,000 jobs were added in April, with the same last month, making it likely the government will use stimulus to push economic growth to 3%. An unemployment rate of 7% in 2014 is a goal, down from 8.2% currently.

The QE3 scheme will likely involve purchasing nine-month maturity housing bonds to motivate the stagnant property market.

Since the subprime crisis in late 2008, when economic data in Bloomberg's Possibility of Monetary Stimulus Index (see graph) passed 90%, a stimulus always occurred.

Because these stimulus packages inject liquidity into the economy, depreciating the US dollar, commodity prices for items such as gold are expected to rise sharply, said Mr Kasemtas.

Long-term trends for gold prices are still positive due to the depreciation of key global currencies, US interest rates likely to remain near zero until 2014 and low inflation.

Central banks continue to buy gold as a foreign asset reserve instead of high-risk currencies, but exploration and production costs of gold mining are rising.

Analysts see an average price of gold by the end of the year at $1,840 an ounce. Investors should make gold about 10% of their total investment, he said.

The capital market remains under pressure because the Greek political issue could worsen the euro-zone situation. If the Syriza Party, which is against the bailout package, wins the election, then the bailout with the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund may be reconsidered, which may cause Greece to exit the EU.

In this case, risk asset value would drop sharply, and Greece and the EU would be substantially damaged. Greece would face a liquidity problem including an inability to pay government salaries and other fixed expenses. Greece would stop payment of debts causing EU financial institutions to lose more than 200 billion (7.85 trillion baht) or 2% of Europe's economy.

"The most important factor is deposits flowing out from Greece and the euro periphery, which will cause bankruptcies and damage all around the EU," said Mr Kasemtas.

"The hope is Greece will stay in the EU and a party that supports the bailout package will win and set up a government, reducing assets' high risk."
 

Muthukali

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Gold prices for Thursday - Thailand

The Gold Traders Association this morning set the buying prices at 23,695.08 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments and 24,050 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The selling prices were set at 24,550 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments, and 24,150 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The gold prices went down 150 baht from yesterday’s close.

The buying prices yesterday closed at 23,846.68 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments and 24,200 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The selling prices closed at 24,700 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments, and 24,300 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.
 

Muthukali

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Gold prices for Friday - Thailand

The Gold Traders Association this morning set the buying prices at 23,255.44 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments and 23,600 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The selling prices were set at 24,100 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments, and 23,700 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The gold prices went down 450 baht from yesterday’s close.

The buying prices yesterday closed at 23,695.08 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments and 24,050 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The selling prices closed at 24,550 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments, and 24,150 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.
 
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Muthukali

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Copper Trade Most Bullish Since March as China Cuts: Commodities

Copper traders are the most bullish in three months as China, the biggest buyer, reduced interest rates to bolster growth, increasing expectations that prices will rebound from the longest slump in two years.

Sixteen of 31 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg expect the metal to gain next week and eight were neutral, the highest proportion since March 9. Stockpiles in warehouses monitored by the London Metal Exchange, the world’s largest metals bourse, declined 38 percent this year and Morgan Stanley is predicting at least another year of supply shortages.

China, which accounts for 41 percent of global demand, cut interest rates for the first time since 2008 yesterday after growth slowed for five consecutive quarters. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke told Congress yesterday the central bank is ready to act should economic conditions worsen. Copper tripled as the Fed bought $2.3 trillion of debt in two rounds of so-called quantitative easing ending in June 2011.

“Since China is the biggest user of copper that rate cut should give a little boost,” said Donald Selkin, the New York- based chief market strategist at National Securities Corp., which manages about $3 billion of assets. “The potential for some kind of stimulus package should result in copper finally turning around.”

Consecutive Weeks
Copper rose as much as 2.4 percent to $7,585 a metric ton on the LME after China’s announcement and was last at $7,481, paring this year’s drop to 1.6 percent. The metal fell for five consecutive weeks, the longest losing streak since May 2010, and reached a five-month low on June 1. The Standard & Poor’s GSCI gauge of 24 commodities slid 7.9 percent this year and the MSCI All-Country World Index (MXWD) of equities rose 0.7 percent. Treasuries returned 1.7 percent, a Bank of America Corp. index shows.

China’s benchmark one-year lending rate will drop to 6.31 percent from 6.56 percent from today. The People’s Bank of China delayed tightening bank capital rules to 2013 following three cuts since November in the amount of cash that banks need to set aside as reserves. The nation’s economy grew 8.1 percent in the first quarter, the slowest pace in almost three years.

Policy makers are seeking to sustain growth which the International Monetary Fund predicts will accelerate to 4.1 percent in 2013, from 3.5 percent in 2012. Fed Vice Chairman Janet Yellen said June 6 the U.S. “remains vulnerable to setbacks” and may warrant more monetary stimulus. North America consumes about 11 percent of the world’s copper.

Central Bank
European Central Bank President Mario Draghi indicated the bank would act if the debt crisis worsens. Some of the ECB’s Governing Council members wanted a rate cut at their June 6 meeting, when borrowing costs were held at a record-low 1 percent, he said. Europe accounts for about 18 percent of global copper consumption, Barclays Plc estimates.

While inventories monitored by the LME reached 215,350 tons on May 16, the lowest since October 2008, the decline may not just reflect demand. Some may be going to bonded warehouses in China that are exempt from a value-added tax and import duties. Stockpiles in warehouses across Shanghai stand at about 750,000 tons, according to Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd.

Hedge funds and other speculators were still betting on lower prices in the week ended May 29, the latest data from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission show. They had a net-short position of 6,757 U.S. futures and options, from 2,808 contacts a week earlier, the most bearish holding since November.

Monetary Union
Faster growth in China and the U.S. may be offset by an extended slump in Europe. The euro-area economy stalled in the first quarter after companies cut spending, the European Union’s statistics office said June 6. The IMF is predicting that the 17-nation monetary union will contract 0.3 percent this year. Greece holds a second election on June 17 after a vote on May 6 failed to produce a government, fanning concern the country may be forced out of the euro.

Some technical indicators are signaling that copper may be poised to rebound after slumping 15 percent from this year’s high of $8,765 on Feb. 9. The metal’s 14-day relative-strength index is at 35, with a level of 30 indicating a rebound to some analysts who study trading charts. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. predicts prices will climb to $9,000 in three months.

Disruptions to supply may also help prices rally. BHP Billiton Ltd. and Rio Tinto Group (RIO), the world’s biggest and third-largest mining companies by sales, said last month they will ration capital spending because of costs. Codelco, which mines more copper than any other company, produced 10 percent less in the first quarter as ores yielded less metal.

Union Official
Workers at Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc.’s Grasberg mine in Indonesia threatened to strike gain after the dismissal of union members, a union official said June 5. The company halted production at the mine, which has the world’s largest copper reserves, for more than two weeks in February and March. Morgan Stanley anticipates a 130,000-ton shortage this year, widening to 170,000 tons in 2013.

Twenty-four of 31 traders and analysts surveyed by Bloomberg said gold would climb next week. Futures on the Comex exchange in New York rose 1.2 percent to $1,585.70 an ounce since the start of January, extending an 11-year bull market. Prices reached a record $1,923.70 in September.

Nine of 12 people surveyed expect raw sugar to gain next week. The sweetener slipped 14 percent to 20.04 cents a pound on ICE Futures U.S. in New York this year. Prices rallied this week as rains disrupted the harvest in Brazil, the world’s biggest producer.

Corn Prices
Twenty of 25 people surveyed anticipate higher corn prices next week, the largest proportion since October 2010. Twenty-two of 25 said soybeans will advance, the most bullish response since 2004. Corn dropped 8.2 percent to $5.9325 a bushel this year as soybeans advanced 10 percent to $13.3225 a bushel in Chicago trading.

“The market appears to be holding out that all the bad news is going to result in policy makers all over the world having to adopt some form of monetary stimulus,” said Carole Ferguson, an analyst at Fairfax IS in London. “Nobody knows how the European situation is going to pan out. There’s still going to be volatility in commodities.”
 

Muthukali

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Gold prices for Thursday - Thailand

The Gold Traders Association this morning set the buying prices at 23,695.08 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments and 24,050 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The selling prices were set at 24,550 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments, and 24,150 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The gold prices went up 50 baht from yesterday’s close.

The buying prices yesterday closed at 23,649.60 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments and 24,000 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The selling prices closed at 24,500 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments, and 24,100 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.
 

Muthukali

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Gold Traders Bullish as Hedge Funds Increase Wagers

Gold traders are bullish for a fourth consecutive week after hedge funds added to bets that prices will rally, exchange-traded products backed by the metal expanded and Europe’s debt crisis roiled markets.

Twenty-four analysts surveyed by Bloomberg said they expect gold to gain next week and six were bearish. A further three were neutral. Speculators boosted net-long positions by 27 percent in the week ended June 5, the latest Commodity Futures Trading Commission data show. ETP holdings rose 18 metric tons valued at $938 million since the start of June, halting a three- month retreat, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Greek voters return to the polls June 17 after last month’s elections failed to produce a government, increasing concern the 17-nation euro would fracture. Almost $5.7 trillion was wiped off the value of global equities since the end of March on signs of slowing growth, spurring speculation that policymakers will do more to shore up economies. Gold rose about 70 percent as the Federal Reserve bought $2.3 trillion of debt in two rounds of quantitative easing, or QE, ending in June 2011.

“Whatever the outcome in Europe, it will likely be supportive for gold,” said Neil Gregson, who manages about $6.9 billion of natural-resources equities at JPMorgan Asset Management in London. “We’ve still got the possibility of QE3 in the U.S., which would be good for gold.”

Consecutive Years
Bullion futures climbed 3.5 percent to $1,620.60 an ounce on the Comex in New York this year, beating the 11 percent drop in the Standard & Poor’s GSCI gauge of 24 commodities and 0.4 percent decline in the MSCI All-Country World Index of equities. Treasuries returned 1.9 percent, a Bank of America Corp. index (MXWD) shows. Gold has advanced for 11 consecutive years, increasing about sixfold since the end of 2000.

The 10 most widely held options are for prices higher than now, with the biggest conferring the right to buy gold at $2,200 by next month and the second-largest at the same cost by November, according to Comex data. Hedge funds and other speculators added 21,101 futures and options to their net-long position in the week through June 5, making them the most bullish since the start of May, according to CFTC data.

Investors own 2,388.8 tons in bullion-backed ETPS, within 0.9 percent of the record reached March 13, data compiled by Bloomberg show. The three-week gain in holdings is the longest expansion in about three months.

Combined Reserves
Central banks are also buying more metal after adding 456.4 tons last year, the most in almost five decades, according to the London-based World Gold Council, which predicts another 400 tons will be added in 2012. They increased their combined reserves for 14 consecutive months through March, the longest streak since 1964, International Monetary Fund data show. Kazakhstan’s central bank said June 13 it plans to buy 24.5 tons this year to increase gold’s share of its reserves.

While traders are more bullish, gold remains 16 percent below the record $1,923.70 reached Sept. 6. Prices fell as much as 19 percent by May 16 from the closing high of $1,891.90 in August, within 1 percentage point of the common definition of a bear market. Even after boosting bets on a rally, speculators’ net-long position is still 61 percent below the all-time high of 253,653 contracts set in August.

Demand for physical gold in India, last year’s biggest consumer, remains “lackluster,” UBS AG said in a report June 1. There are still no clear indications of an acceleration in the “fear trade,” with transactions in Europe lagging behind volumes seen last year, London-based UBS analyst Edel Tully wrote in a report yesterday. The U.S. Mint sold 18,500 ounces of American Eagle gold coins so far this month, compared with 61,500 ounces for all of June 2011, data on its website show.

Federal Reserve
Bullion tumbled this year in part because the Federal Reserve held off from starting a third round of quantitative easing. Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said June 7 the Fed will need to assess conditions before deciding if more measures are needed to stoke the economy. Gold futures declined 2.8 percent on the day, the most in two months.

“The Fed is more likely to disappoint than to offer up another free lunch to the speculative crowd,” said Jon Nadler, an analyst at Kitco Inc., a precious metals refiner and research company in Montreal. Fed policy makers meet June 19-20 to review their economic projections.

Economists at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. cut their forecast for second-quarter U.S. growth to 1.6 percent from 1.8 percent after a Commerce Department report June 13 showed retail sales fell for a second month. Chicago Fed President Charles Evans said June 11 he would favor “pretty much any accommodative policy,” including buying bonds.

Capital Markets
Spain’s credit rating was lowered three steps to Baa3 on June 13 by Moody’s Investors Service, citing the nation’s debt burden, weakening economy and limited access to capital markets. The nation’s bond yields rose to a euro-era record the following day. Group of 20 nations will meet in Los Cabos, Mexico, June 18-19 to discuss the European debt crisis.

In other commodities, 13 of 23 traders and analysts surveyed by Bloomberg expect copper to climb next week and four were neutral. The metal for delivery in three months, the London Metal Exchange’s benchmark contract, fell 2.4 percent to $7,420 a metric ton this year.

Six of 15 people surveyed said raw sugar will decline next week and four were neutral. The commodity dropped 16 percent to 19.63 cents a pound on ICE Futures U.S. in New York this year. Seventeen of 29 people surveyed anticipate higher corn prices next week, while 21 of 28 said soybeans will advance. Corn dropped 20 percent to $5.1775 a bushel this year as soybeans climbed 9 percent to $13.1675 a bushel.

Asset Management
“Investors’ concerns have shifted from the risk of a severe global economic decline to the central bank response, which is positive,” said Adrian Day, who manages about $160 million of assets as president of Adrian Day Asset Management in Annapolis, Maryland. “Whatever the likely developments in Europe, the result is likely to be easier money, and that’s positive for gold.”
 
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